Comrades | |
---|---|
Directed by | Johannes Guter |
Written by | August Strindberg (play) |
Distributed by | UFA |
Release date |
|
Country | Germany |
Languages |
|
Comrades (German : Kameraden) is a 1919 German silent film directed by Johannes Guter. [1] It is based on the play Marauders by August Strindberg.
Axel and Bertha are a modern, emancipated artist couple in Paris. He is feminine and vain. She is financially independent, a member of the women's association "Married's Women's right of ownership" and uses male nude models.
The Ideal Woman is a 1959 West German comedy film directed by Josef von Báky and starring Ruth Leuwerik, Martin Benrath and Boy Gobert. Fanny Becker, the mayor of Rosenburg, meets a former lover and is tempted to resume her romance with him, but eventually decides to remain with her husband.
Anna Favetti is a 1938 German romantic drama film directed by Erich Waschneck and starring Brigitte Horney, Mathias Wieman and Irene Falckenberg. The screenplay was written by Walter von Hollander, adapted from his own novel Licht im dunklen Haus.
The Scoundrel is a 1931 German comedy film directed by Eugen Schüfftan and Franz Wenzler and starring Max Adalbert, Emilia Unda, and Evelyn Holt. It is based on the play The Scoundrel by Hans Reimann and Toni Impekoven. The film was remade in 1939 and 1959.
reels
Comedians is a 1925 German silent film directed by Karl Grune and starring Lya De Putti, Eugen Klöpfer and Hermann Picha.
The Woman in Heaven is a 1920 German silent film directed by Johannes Guter and starring Lil Dagover and Werner Krauss.
That Dangerous Age is a 1927 German silent film directed by Eugen Illés and starring Asta Nielsen, Bernhard Goetzke and Hans Wassmann.
Two Good Comrades is a 1933 German war comedy film directed by Max Obal and starring Paul Hörbiger, Fritz Kampers, and Jessie Vihrog.
Ariadne in Hoppegarten is a 1928 German silent sports film directed by Robert Dinesen and starring Alfred Abel, Maria Jacobini and Paul Henckels. It takes place in Hoppegarten, a traditional centre of horseracing in the German capital of Berlin.
House of Life is a 1952 West German drama film directed by Karl Hartl and starring Gustav Fröhlich, Cornell Borchers and Edith Mill. The film's setting is a maternity hospital, portraying the stories of various staff and patients.
Come Back is a 1953 West German drama film directed by Alfred Braun and starring Winnie Markus, Rudolf Prack and Hans Stüwe.
Alarm at Station III is a 1939 German crime film directed by Philipp Lothar Mayring and starring Gustav Fröhlich, Jutta Freybe and Kirsten Heiberg. It is set in a Scandinavian country with Prohibition.
Theodore the Goalkeeper is a 1950 Austrian-German sports comedy film directed by E. W. Emo and starring Theo Lingen, Hans Moser, and Josef Meinrad.
Den of Iniquity is a 1925 German silent film directed by Constantin J. David and starring Reinhold Schünzel, Jack Trevor and Maly Delschaft.
The Seven Dresses of Katrin is a 1954 West German romantic comedy film directed by Hans Deppe and starring Sonja Ziemann, Paul Klinger, and Georg Thomalla. The film tells the story of a woman's life through seven dresses she wears.
The Bank Crash of Unter den Linden is a 1926 German silent film directed by Paul Merzbach and starring Alfred Abel, Hans Albers, and Margarete Schlegel. It was produced by the German subsidiary of the Fox Film Company.
Passion is a 1940 German drama film directed by Walter Janssen and starring Olga Tschechowa, Hans Stüwe and Paul Otto.
The Silent Mill or The Story of the Silent Mill is a 1914 German silent drama film directed by Richard Oswald and starring Alfred Abel, Ferdinand Bonn and Robert Valberg.
The Woman Without a Soul is a 1920 German silent film directed by Léo Lasko and starring Edith Meller, Werner Krauss and Alfred Abel.
Playing with Destiny is a 1924 German silent film directed by Siegfried Philippi and starring Alfred Abel, Sascha Gura and Claire Rommer.